Showing posts with label North East. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North East. Show all posts

Sunday, March 6, 2016

Boko Haram Falls Victim to a Food Crisis It Created

MORA, Cameroon — At first, the attack had all the hallmarks of a typical Boko Haram assault. Armed fighters stormed a town on the border with Nigeria, shooting every man they saw.


But this time, instead of burning homes and abducting hostages, the fighters gathered cows, goats and any kind of food they could round up, then fled with it all.


Boko Haram
Boko Haram

Boko Haram, the Islamist extremist group terrorizing this part of the world, is on the hunt — for food.


After rampaging across the region for years, forcing more than two million people to flee their homes and farms, Boko Haram appears to be falling victim to a major food crisis of its own creation.


Farmers have fled, leaving behind fallow fields. Herdsmen have rerouted cattle drives to avoid the violence. Throughout the region, entire villages have emptied, leaving a string of ghost towns with few people for Boko Haram to dominate — and little for the group to plunder.


“They need food. They need to eat,” Midjiyawa Bakari, the governor of the Far North region of Cameroon, said of Boko Haram. “They’re stealing everything.”


Across parts of northeastern Nigeria and border regions like the Far North, trade has come to a halt and tens of thousands of people are on the brink of famine, United Nations officials say. Markets have shut down because vendors have nothing to sell, and even if they did, many buyers have been scared off by the suicide bombers Boko Haram sends into crowds.


The hunt for food appears to be part of what is pushing Boko Haram deeper into Cameroon, according to an American State Department review of attacks in the first few weeks of this year.


“They started shooting, shooting, shooting,” said Matte Bama, recounting the night Boko Haram raided her town, Amchide. Now she shares a house with 23 others, wondering when she can return home. “They took our livestock,” she said. “They took everything and they left.”


Such attacks are becoming increasingly common in the areas bordering Boko Haram’s base in northeastern Nigeria. A military campaign by Nigeria and its neighbors has chased fighters from villages they once controlled. Now, officials contend, the militants are left to scrounge for food in the sparse Sambisa Forest during the dry season, or go out raiding for whatever they can find.


“Their supply routes are blocked,” said Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar, a Nigerian military spokesman. “They’re hungry.”


This week, dozens of emaciated Boko Haram fighters, along with captive women and children, surrendered to military officials in Nigeria, a situation the authorities expect to repeat itself in coming weeks.


“They have nowhere to go,” General Abubakar said.


By early February, Boko Haram was estimated to have stolen at least 4,200 head of cattle in Cameroon. In one attack in early January, the militants descended on a town in Cameroon and took dozens of bicycles, wheelbarrows, and 150 small animals like sheep and goats — and then kidnapped six people to help lead the animals back into Nigeria, according to the State Department review.


Boko Haram has also taken hostages and forced them to raid cattle from other villages, it said.


But while some elements of Boko Haram may be battered, fighters still manage to carry out devastating attacks, the results of which are on full display at the hospital in Maroua, the capital of the Far North. Shrapnel and burn victims from recent attacks across various towns recuperate together. One young woman lay in a coma, her hair arranged in perfect skinny braids.


Until last summer, when the suicide attacks in Cameroon’s Far North began, the most common ailments at the hospital were stomach trouble and motorbike mishaps. It did not even have a surgeon. Doctors Without Borders arrived to set up a large triage tent, and in January, a team from the health ministry flew in to train workers in treating war wounds. Now the hospital has been converted into a conflict zone clinic, with a full-time surgeon and more to come.


Recent joint operations by the Cameroonian and Nigerian militaries have captured and killed numerous fighters and seized suicide belts, weapons and equipment for making mines. Officials hope to squeeze the fighters from both sides of the border so they have nowhere left to run.


But the multinational military force — which includes Chad, Niger and the American military in an advisory role — sometimes has trouble securing territory once it is cleared.


In Cameroon, soldiers drove Boko Haram fighters from the border town of Kerawa in October, but it has since been assaulted at least six times, with militants beheading a young man in one attack. Early last month, a suicide bomber entered Kerawa and blew himself up behind a house, killing a tailor. According to a State Department report on the episode, the bomber had been looking for a large group of people to kill, but after all the attacks in the town, the streets were empty.


The mass displacement caused by Boko Haram — and by the sometimes indiscriminate military campaign to defeat it — has left 1.4 million people in the region without adequate food supplies, the United Nations says. In Borno State in northeastern Nigeria, where the situation is the most acute, humanitarian workers say that 50,000 people are one step away from famine. Along the Chadian border, farmers typically trade their pepper crops for imported cereals and grains. But the pepper fields have been abandoned and there is little left to trade.


“We’re looking at a large-scale crisis in very remote areas,” said Denise Brown, the West and Central Africa regional director for the World Food Programme. “This is not a today problem. This is a tomorrow problem and a next year problem unless it’s contained, and I don’t see it coming to a halt soon.”


In the Far North of Cameroon, this time of year is a moonscape of bone-dry river beds and clouds of dust so thick they look like misty fog. The region is moving into the so-called lean season, the in-between months when the fruits of the previous harvest are being depleted and next year’s crop is not yet ready.


Last year’s harvest was already smaller than usual because of low rainfall. Water tables are low, and worries are mounting about an adequate supply of drinking water, especially at the refugee camp here that has new arrivals daily.


About 55,000 refugees from Nigeria have taken shelter in the camp, while 158,000 Cameroonians have been scattered across villages, often crammed into tiny shacks with relatives and strangers until they can safely return home.


Mariam Yaya was in Kerawa when Boko Haram came for the livestock. Her uncle and his two children were killed. Her husband survived because he, like many other men who knew they might be targeted by militants, had retreated to the forest, where he slept in case of a Boko Haram attack. People in the small village of Mora, which has doubled in size in recent weeks with new arrivals, took pity on Ms. Yaya and her three children and built them a home from mud here.


Despite the influx of new people, officials closed the town’s market out of fear that it would be attacked. Boko Haram had struck a satellite village just days before. Residents now worry that the market will remain shut for weeks.


The food crisis is part of broader economic devastation in the area, adding to the burdens on Cameroon at a time when it is hosting thousands of refugees fleeing a religious war in nearby Central African Republic.


The flood of Nigerian refugees into Cameroon is creating hard feelings. Even a religious leader who attends births and marriages in the Minawao Refugee Camp said the refugees needed to go home.


The United Nations accused Cameroon of sending tens of thousands of refugees back to Nigeria at the end of last year. The government has since said it would involve the United Nations in any plans involving the refugees’ return.


“They have lost everything,” said Najat Rochdi, a United Nations humanitarian coordinator in Yaoundé, the capital. “We cannot throw them back to unsafety.”


Tourism has plummeted in Cameroon, which has such diverse ecosystems and a range of wildlife that it refers to itself as Little Africa. Guides who once led visitors to see lions and elephants in Waza National Park in the north now scrape by with occasional work building new homes in the Minawao Refugee Camp.


Even elephants are affected by the Boko Haram food crisis. Herdsmen driving cattle from Chad to northern Nigeria now detour south, across Bénoué National Park, where cows compete with a dwindling elephant population for food.


And with many herdsmen cut off from markets in the struggling Far North, wildlife workers fear they may discover a new, more lucrative trade: ivory poaching. Last week scientists flying over the Bénoué park spotted two elephant carcasses.



Boko Haram Falls Victim to a Food Crisis It Created

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

We are not paid a dime - Policemen fighting Boko Haram complain

Policemen on counter-insurgency operations in the north-east region have complained about the non-payment of their allowances by the state governments.


Mercenaries to fight Boko Haram
Mercenaries to fight Boko Haram

Specifically, some policemen serving in Borno State told our correspondent that they have not been paid for about three months, while others who had just concluded their tour of duty alleged that they were under-paid.


“Before now, policemen on counter-insurgency operations in Borno State were paid N30,000, but this was later reduced to N15,000 due to the economic situation. Our set was paid N7,000 instead of N15,000 and we don’t know if this was done by the state government or by the police command,” a policeman, who felt shortchanged stated.


Another police officer who had just returned from the battle front after spending three months engaging Boko Haram terrorists, explained that he and his colleagues were not paid, but were asked to hold on by the police authorities.


“We were not paid a dime, we were simply informed that the allowances have not been paid by the state government. I don’t know why the police were treated this way, because I am sure they would not ask members of the armed forces to be patient,” the police officer said.


But the Inspector-General of Police, Solomon Arase, who confirmed the delay in the payment of the policemen, noted that the police high command was holding discussions with the governors of the north-eastern states over the non-payment of allowances to police personnel on counter-insurgency operations.


Arase who said this in response to questions during his meeting with Commissioners of Police on Wednesday in Abuja, admitted that the policemen had complained to his office about the non-payment of their allowances for about four months now.



We are not paid a dime - Policemen fighting Boko Haram complain

Saturday, September 5, 2015

PDP group opposes Fayose on party chairmanship

A pressure group in the Peoples Democratic Party, Restart PDP Project, has said the party would be setting a dangerous precedent if it did not elect a chairman from the North-East to replace the acting chairman.


Fayose vows to lead opposition against APC

Fayose vows to lead opposition against APC


It maintained that the party’s next chairman must come from the North East, the same zone where the ex-chairman hailed from.


Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State had on Sunday said the next PDP chairman should come from the South-West, noting that installing a new chairman from the North-East for the party at this time was a waste of time.


But the leader of the Restart PDP Project, Emmanuel Nwosu, in an interview on Thursday in Abuja insisted that the next party chairman should come from the North-East in line with the PDP constitution.


He said, “Our position is that the next party chairman must come from the North East. There is nothing other than that because that is the position of our party constitution.


“If it doesn’t happen, then there is a big danger for the party because we are the party now in opposition and Nigerians are watching to see what kind of party we are.


“Remember that most of our party members have condemned the impunity that reigned supreme in the past. Many people are sad because of imposition of candidates and all that.” Nwosu also called on President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure fairness in the current fight against corruption.


He said a situation where only members of the PDP in the last administration were targeted in the anti-graft war would not augur well for the country.


“It is quite clear that we have not seen any sign that members of the governing party are interrogated. Up till now, it is only the PDP members that are under the watch of the anti-graft agencies.


“We believe that for good governance, the current government should do the needful and make sure that its anti-corruption war is executed without fear or favour,” Nwosu stated.



PDP group opposes Fayose on party chairmanship

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Nigerian soldiers nab Boko Haram food, fuel supplier in Baga

A suspected supplier of fuel and food to the Boko Haram terrorists group was trapped in Daban Shata area Baga, Borno State, Hausa service of the BBC reports.


Boko Haram, food, fuel supplier

Boko Haram, food, fuel supplier


The military intelligence had been trailing unnamed suspect till he was eventually nabbed trapped in the early hours of yesterday.


Boko Haram fighters killed older boys and men in front of their families before taking women and children into the forest where many died of hunger and disease, freed captives told Reuters on Sunday after they were brought to a refugee camp in Yola, Adamawa State.


The Nigerian army rescued hundreds of women and children last week from the Islamist fighters in Sambisa Forest in a major operation that has turned international attention to the plight of hostages.


After days on the road in pickup trucks, hundreds were released on Sunday into the care of authorities at a refugee camp in Yola, to be fed and treated for injuries. They spoke to reporters for the first time.


“They didn’t allow us to move an inch,” said one of the freed women, Asabe Umaru, describing her captivity. “If you needed the toilet, they followed you. We were kept in one place. We were under bondage.


“We thank God to be alive today. We thank the Nigerian army for saving our lives,” she added.


It is not known how many people Boko Haram has abducted, but Amnesty International estimates the insurgents has taken more than 2,000 women and girls captive since the start of 2014.


Boko Haram is thought to have killed thousands of people, but troops alongside neighbouring armies from Chad, Cameroon and Niger have won back swathes of territory from the terrorist group in the past couple of months.


 


NEMA resumes intervention in Borno IDP camps


Hostages freed from Boko Haram

Hostages freed from Boko Haram


The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has said that it had resumed weekly supply of relief materials to Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Borno, following the successful conduct of the 2015 general polls.


The NEMA North East Coordinator, Alhaji Mohammed Kanar stated this at the end of a stakeholders meeting in Maiduguri.


Kanar explained that the agency had suspended its operations during the polls to avoid politicisation.


“We had to stay back for a while, because a number of polling units were located at the camps.


“We do not want to be involved in the politics at the camps during the elections,” he said.


Kanar said that although NEMA continued to provide essential materials at the camp even during the polls without any noise.


“Although we rushed in to provide some materials at the Lamisla Primary School to the IDPs from Northern Borno who were displaced few days to the election.


“We felt that the best thing was to suspend large scale distribution of relief materials to avoid politicisation,” he added.



Nigerian soldiers nab Boko Haram food, fuel supplier in Baga

Sunday, April 5, 2015

APC chief demands Senate Presidency or Speaker for N’East

The North-East chapter of the All Progressives Congress has demanded from the leadership of the party, the Senate Presidency or Speaker of the House of Representatives in recognition of their contribution to the party’s victory at the just concluded presidential election.


The people said they had abundant talents and qualified candidates for the positions if given the opportunity to produce either of the two major political positions.


The APC National Vice Chairman, North-East, Mr. Babachir Lawal, who made the demand in a statement in Abuja on Sunday, also urged the voters in the region to massively vote for the APC at the governorship and state House of Assembly election scheduled for  Saturday.


He said, “In recognition of this immense contribution to the party’s victory, I want to seize this opportunity to call  on the APC National Leadership to cede either the Senate Presidency or Speaker of the House of Representatives to the region.


“We have an abundance of talents and eminently qualified candidates for these positions and this will set the region on a course of accelerated development that it so desperately needs.”


Lawal however asked his people to vote for the APC on Saturday because “for us to reap the full benefits of an APC government at the centre, we must also have APC in government in the six states in our zone.”



APC chief demands Senate Presidency or Speaker for N’East

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Jonathan plans to rebuild North-East – Muazu

National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, Alhaji Adamu Mu’azu, said on Thursday that President Goodluck Jonathan, will implement an already packaged marshal plan to rebuild the entire Northeast region if re-elected for a second term in office.


Mu’azu, who stated this in a statement in Abuja, said the idea to restore life fully to the already devastated region, would be the priority of the PDP in the next four years.


He expressed delight in the progress achieved by the armed forces and their international collaborators in the war against insurgency in the Northeast and that the current mop up operations to sweep away the insurgents had progressed beyond his party’s imagination.


He said, “President Jonathan when re-elected for a second term will declare a Marshall Plan to rebuild the entire geopolitical zone affected by the war. Our party has this programme on the top of our agenda in the next four years.


“That will be the right way to wipe away the scars of war among the people of that area. I remain hopeful that our party has not only taken the pole position in this tight two-horse race to win the 2015 presidential election, but will also go ahead to win the majority in the National Assembly and win many more states.”


Mu’azu said his party will continue its current interactive meetings with stakeholders, especially traditional rulers not minding the campaign of calumny from the opposition All Progressives Congress that it was sharing dollars to Yoruba monarchs.


He said, “We shall continue this interactive engagement with Nigerians until 26th March when campaigns officially end before the March 28th Presidential elections, presenting our scorecard in government, our programme in the next four years to 2019, using the town hall format and meeting our revered traditional rulers.



Jonathan plans to rebuild North-East – Muazu

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Boko Haram: Election may not hold in recaptured towns, villages - Minimah

The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Kenneth Minimah, on Tuesday hinted that elections may not hold in North-East communities recently liberated from Boko Haram insurgents.


Kenneth Minimah, Nigeria’s Chief of Army StafNigerian soldiers

Kenneth Minimah, Nigeria’s Chief of Army StafNigerian soldiers


Minimah told journalists after a Security Council meeting presided over by President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja that government structures needed to be restored in the town and villages before issues about elections could be discussed.


The presidential election is billed for March 28 while governorship and National Assembly polls will take place on April 11.


The COAS however said that the Independent National Electoral Commission needed to re-assess the situation in the communities before a final stand could be taken on elections.


The Chairman of INEC,   Attahiru Jega, had briefed the meeting attended by all heads of security agencies and relevant ministers of the state of the electoral body’s   preparedness for the   general elections while the security chiefs gave updates on the anti-terrorism war.


Minimah said, “I am not competent to speak on that (elections) matter. INEC is still there, INEC has to re-access the situation and evaluate because the areas have been liberated, but I can also tell you that not all structures of governance have been reinstated.


“They will need to be reinstated so that citizens can go back to their areas and it is then I think they can execute their rights as voters.”


When probed further, the Army chief said he did not know how soon the structures could be reinstated.


When further asked whether the operation could be completed before March 28, he replied , “It is our wish and we pray God gives that to us, but war is war. War sometimes is not fought on some platforms of permutation.”


The COAS disclosed that after reviewing the North-East operations particularly in the last three weeks, the council renewed its confidence in the Nigerian Armed Forces and commended the troops.


He said, “You know Yobe and Adamawa states have been liberated completely and we look forward to the reinstatement of structures of government and governance.


“I am also sure you know that in Borno State, out of the 27 local governments, we have three local governments remaining: Abadam, Kalabaldi and Gwoza and we are optimistic that with time, we will liberate those LGAs.”


Despite the success recorded however, Minimah said there was no news yet on the over 200 schoolgirls abducted in Chibok, Borno State, almost a year ago.


He said, “There is no news on the Chibok girls for now. In all the liberated areas , we have also made enquiries but the truth is when the terrorists are running away, they also run with their families.


“Those we have   come in contact with have not made any comments suggesting that Chibok girls were there and taken away.


“But we are optimistic that as they are losing the   areas captured by them,   we will get further details on that.”


The Army boss also denied media reports that   security agencies   were being assisted in the war against terrorism by mercenaries.


“There are no mercenaries employed by anyone. What we have are advisers and instructors and they are all over the world. Whenever you have new equipment, the equipment comes with contract and the contract includes maintenance and the technicians that come with them are those that we hire,” he said.


Jega had emerged from the council meeting at about 2.20pm after briefing the members on INEC’s   preparations for the elections.


He was accompanied to the meeting by two top officials of the commission.


When State House correspondents asked him about the meeting, the INEC boss simply said, “I believe it went well.”


He did not answer subsequent questions relating to the use of card reader during the elections and INEC’s level of   preparedness as he made his way out of the Presidential Villa.


The meeting which started a few minutes after 11am had in attendance, the Vice President Namadi Sambo; the Secretary to the Government of the Federation,   Pius Anyim; the Chief of Staff to the President,   Jones Arogbofa; the   National Security Adviser,   Sambo Dasuki; the Attorney-General of the Federation, Muhammed Adoke (SAN); the Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan; the Minister of Interior,   Aba Moro; and   Minister of Foreign Affairs, Aminu Wali.


Others  were the Chief of Defence Staff,   Alex Badeh; the Chief of Naval Staff, Usman Jibrin; the Chief of Air Staff,   Adesola Amosu; the Inspector-General of Police,   Suleiman Abba; as well as the heads of the Department of State Services, the National Intelligence Agency and the Chief of Defence Intelligence.


700,000 PVCs still being produced –Jega


The PUNCH gathered from one of the officials that attended the meeting that Jega reassured the council of INEC’s readiness for the elections.


He was also said to have told the council that 700,000 permanent voter cards were still being produced and that those who had yet to collect their PVCs still had till March 22 to do so.


According to the official, Jega explained that the commission had utilised the six-week period of extension to further perfect the electoral process in order to deliver credible elections to Nigerians.


A copy of Jega’s statement at the meeting tagged “Update on INEC’s preparedness for the 2015 general elections,” was also obtained exclusively by our correspondent.


In the document, the INEC boss insisted that the commission had forged ahead in its determination to conduct the elections on the rescheduled dates.


He said, “It can be seen that INEC has forged ahead with preparations to conduct the 2015 general elections as rescheduled for March 28 and April 11.


“We believe that the period of extension has offered us an opportunity to further perfect the electoral process for the delivery of free, fair, credible and peaceful elections.


“I am pleased that all the non-sensitive and sensitive materials for the elections, including ballot papers, have now been delivered to states ready for deployment.”


Jega however   raised security concerns over the polls.


He stressed the need for soldiers to be on standby in case of violence since policemen who would be at polling booths would not be armed.


The electoral umpire added, “Security on the day of election and the days following the elections remains a major area of concern.


“Among other things, we hope that the traditional ban on public officials moving around with their security details and orderlies will be stringently enforced.


“We also hope that the ban on unauthorised general movement will be enforced. The bounding over politicians and the rounding up of thugs and drug suppliers should be intensified.


“Perhaps most importantly, we appeal for special preparations for protecting election staff, including rapid evacuation when necessary. Corpers’ lodges should also be adequately protected.”


Jega also said that the commission had made full preparations to enable Internally Displaced Persons to vote during the elections.


This, he explained, would apply to IDPs from areas that are worst hit by the insurgency, specifically Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states.


The plan, according to him, is to create voting centres in safe areas.


He said where applicable, the voting centres would be located close to the IDP camps.


Jega added that the arrangement would require special provisions for security and the commission would be counting on the various agencies for assistance.


He described the turnout for the mock demonstration of card reader as satisfactory.


According to him, the demonstration was also largely satisfactory with close to 100 percent verification and 60 percent authentication.



Boko Haram: Election may not hold in recaptured towns, villages - Minimah

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Military onslaught on Boko Haram proves Jonathan’s critics wrong - ex-militant leaders

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Niger Delta ex-militant leaders, yesterday, said that the remarkable achievements made by the Nigerian armed forces, the Joint Multi-national Task Forces in their present onslaught against Boko Haram in the North-East region, have proved President Goodluck Jonathan’s critics wrong.


Army, Jonathan fighting Boko Haram Army, Jonathan fighting Boko Haram


The ex-militant leaders added that the President has defeated his opponents who were carrying campaign of his ineffectiveness in tackling insecurity in parts of the North, as Mr. President had adopted a working strategy to end the Boko Haram menace.


Coordinator of the Phase Three Amnesty group in Delta State, Mr. Preye Ekpebide, who spoke with reporters after the group’s meeting in Warri, commended the Federal Government and the Armed Forces for the acquisition of modern warplanes, Helicopters, and personnel carriers that are assisting in winning the war against the insurgents.


Ekpebide, who applauded the gallantry of Nigerian soldiers and the Multi-National Taskforce, noted that that the Nigerian Army which was highly rated in the world was gradually redeeming its image, adding that the deployment of Army Generals to the battle field was a great morale booster to the rank and file.


The ex-militant leader said Nigerians wee happy with the recent onslaught in the North-East against Boko Haram and called on Nigerians to be patient with the military. He also called for prayers for the soldiers in the battle fields and urged everyone to assist security agencies in bringing insurgency to an end in the country.


Expressing joy over the towns the military had re-taken, he said this has further boosted Jonathan’s acceptance by Nigerians because Mr. President has demonstrated that he is a man of his words, enjoining all and sundry to have faith in the current administration.


 



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Military onslaught on Boko Haram proves Jonathan’s critics wrong - ex-militant leaders

Friday, February 20, 2015

We’ll rout out terrorists in the North East - Jonathan

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President Goodluck Jonathan, yesterday, assured Nigerians that the general elections would be conducted as scheduled by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, expressing optimism that the security challenges in the North eastern part of the country which was attributed as cause of the initial postponement of the election date, was being addressed.


Jonathan Jonathan


Speaking at the commissioning ceremony of four newly acquired warships by the Nigerian Navy, a landmark achievement in the last 32 years, President Jonathan stated that efforts were in top gear to return the north eastern part of the country to a level where insurgents would not affect the coming election.


Part of his administration’s effort to address activities of terrorists in the North east, he said, was the procurement of technical capacity to the Armed Forces, an effort he boasted was capable of routing out Boko Haram.


According to him: “I want to use this platform to promise my good country men and women that we will rout out Boko Haram. Our capacity has increased sufficiently and our officers and men are doing wonderfully well in the north. They are working hard day and night and I have directed that Nigerians should be briefed regularly. We have improved the technical capacity of our men; both the Army, Navy and Air Force and we are pleased with what is happening.


“And we must conduct our election as scheduled by INEC because within this period, we are convinced that we will return the north to a level where activities of extremists will not affect our election”, he stated.


He scored the Nigerian Navy high in the fight against maritime illegalities, disclosing that the volume of stolen crude oil in the nation’s water had drastically reduced compared to what obtained but, however, lamented that the only area of challenge was vandalism of gas pipelines in the swamps.


President Jonathan also stated that Nigeria cannot be defined by the activities of Boko Haram. He spoke, yesterday evening, when he met with the Yoruba Elders Forum.


According to Jonathan, politicians must put the country’s unity and stability ahead of their political ambitions.


“No matter what we want to do, that is those of us who are aspiring to run this country or even at the state level, first and foremost you must have a country.


“If we don’t have a country there will be no office to hold; whether it is the office of the President or office of the Vice President or office of the minister or whatever office, there must be Nigeria first.


“My position is that let us all collectively defend and protect this country and that is why I always feel bad when people make statements that expose Nigeria as if it is the worst country on earth. We are not that bad.


“Yes, we have issues in this country. Even issues of security, like this Boko Haram, because we are managing a very delicate situation. Sometimes people define Nigeria by the Boko Haram. Nigeria cannot be defined based on Boko Haram alone. There is terror all over the world.


“My belief is that in the next three weeks or so if we don’t completely take over all our territories, we would have handled the Boko Haram to the extent that it will no longer be a problem to the elections that will come up.”


Earlier, the President of YCE, Gen. Adeyinka Adebayo (Ret) commended the President for the quality of leadership he is providing for the country.



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We’ll rout out terrorists in the North East - Jonathan

Friday, February 6, 2015

Soldiers kill Boko Haram commander, recover lost weapons

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The troops of the Multi National Joint Task Force may have killed a very high ranking member of the Boko Haram sect in the ongoing military operation in the North-East.


Boko Haram weapons Boko Haram weapons


It was learnt that the insurgent’s commander whose identity was not revealed was killed in one of the joint raids carried out by Nigerian troops and their counterparts from Chad, Niger and Cameroon.


It was stated that the late commander was one of the top officers to the founder of the Boko Haram sect, Muhammad Yusuf.


The Boko Haram commander was said to have been killed during the battle of Malamfatori


Nigeria’s neighbouring countries are deploying a total of 3,600 troops to the Multi National Joint Task Force to aid the nation’s current onslaught against Boko Haram.


Out of the figure, Chad contributes the largest figure of 2,500 troops while Niger and Cameroon contribute 700 and 400 troops respectively.


It was stated that the insurgent’s top commander was killed in an air raid by helicopter gunships of the Nigerian Air Force involved in the combined operation with ground forces during the fight to reclaim some border towns from the insurgents.


Some of the towns liberated by the soldiers of the Multi National Joint Task Force from Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon are Gamboru-Ngala, Malamfatori, Abadam, Kirawa and Ashigashiya and Michika.


It was learnt that troops had encircled Gwoza, and were moving against the town which was captured and made part of a caliphate announced by the insurgents last year.


An intelligence personnel said on Thursday that the Nigerian Army also made a big break in the battle against the insurgents by recovering some of the most lethal weapons captured by the Boko Haram fighters when they took over the Baga base of the task force.


The recovered equipment included “a Battle Armoured Tank equipped with comprehensive protective system and maximum firing distance and accuracy with anti-aircraft rotating mount; its fire accuracy is attained by range-finder, ballistic computer with a thermal barrel sleeve.”


Also in the list of the captured items are armoured personnel vehicles, artillery guns, arms and ammunition, and Hilux vehicles.


Our correspondent could not get the Director, Defence Information, Maj. Gen. Chris Olukolade, to comment on the development as calls to his mobile telephone line could not connect.


Meanwhile, Boko Haram fighters have shot or burned to death about 90 civilians and wounded 500 in the ongoing fighting in a Cameroonian border town near Nigeria, officials in Cameroon said on Thursday.



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Soldiers kill Boko Haram commander, recover lost weapons

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Army Reviews Training Curriculum To Tackle Boko Haram – Minimah

The Chief of Army Staff, Lt-General Kenneth Minimah, on Friday in Zaria, Kaduna State, said the Nigerian Army has reviewed the training curriculum of the Depot, Nigerian Army, to effectively tackle insurgency in the Northeast.


Soldiers tasked with fighting Boko Haram militants arrive to face trials for mutiny in Abuja on October 2, 2014. Nearly 100 soldiers tasked with fighting Boko Haram militants in Nigeria’s far northeast appeared at a military court martial on Thursday, facing a range of charges including mutiny. The hearing comes just weeks after a tribunal sentenced 12 soldiers to death following their conviction for shooting at their commanding officer in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, in May. AFP PHOTO Soldiers


He made this known during the Passing Out Parade (POP) of the 71 Regular Recruits Intake of the Depot, Nigerian Army, which took place at the parade ground of the Chindit Barracks, Zaria.


The COAS, who was the Reviewing Officer of the POP, said: “Your training curriculum was reviewed taking into cognizance lessons learned in the ongoing operations, particularly in the Northeastern part of our country. Apart from improvement in training, we also ensured that you were adequately kitted and provided with necessary logistics before and during your training.


On forthcoming elections, Minimah said: “As you are all aware, this is an election year, I therefore urge you to read and understand the code of conduct for military personnel during elections. You must remain apolitical at all times. To achieve this, you are expected to discharge your duties diligently, professionally and patriotically”.



Army Reviews Training Curriculum To Tackle Boko Haram – Minimah

Friday, October 10, 2014

Jonathan increases troops in North-East to 20,000

In the bid to end the reign of terror in the North-eastern part of the country, President Goodluck Jonathan has increased the number of troops in the region from 15,000 to 20,000.


Nigerian soldiers on armour tank seized from Boko Haram in Konduga Nigerian soldiers on armour tank seized from Boko Haram in Konduga


Coordinating Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, who disclosed this in a lecture delivered at a forum in London, also confirmed that Boko Haram had killed more than 170 teachers in Borno State this year.


The text of the lecture was made available to our correspondent in Abuja on Friday.


The minister also disclosed that the nation lost more than 100,000 barrels daily to international oil thieves working in alliance with criminal elements in Nigeria.


She said, “First on security, our military men and women are confronting an unprecedented challenge with courage and bravery. The president recently increased the number of troops that are in the North East from 15,000 to 20,000.


“Regional cooperation on security has got better following a decision by neighbouring countries Chad, Cameroon, Benin, and Niger, to each contribute a battalion of soldiers, to fight Boko Haram alongside Nigeria.


“President Goodluck Jonathan has accepted offers from the international community for more surveillance, aircraft cover, and equipment that enhances our ability to locate, fight and root out insurgents.


“These efforts are beginning to make a difference and the tide is now turning. Not too long ago, the leader of the Boko Haram cell thought to have masterminded the kidnap of the Chibok girls was arrested.”



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Jonathan increases troops in North-East to 20,000

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Obasanjo"s son, Adeboye discharged, met his father in Jos

By Ehi Ekhator, Naija Center News.


Lt. Col Adeboye Obasanjo, the son of the former president of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo, who was shot during an ambush by the dreaded Boko Haram sect in Michika, Adamawa State, was on Monday discharged from the hospital.


Obasanjo Obasanjo’s son, Boko Haram


This was disclosed by the Corps Commander of the 44 Army Reference Hospital, Maj-Gen. Obashina Ogunbiyi.


Ogunbiyi, while speaking with journalists in Kaduna said that more than 170 soldiers fighting Boko Haram in the terrorist zone had been treated in the hospital.


He also disclosed that some were flew abroad for further treatment depending on how serious the injuries are, adding that Adeboye  who was treated in the hospital is currently doing well and is discharged.


He said, “Up to date, the hospital is the base hospital for the Zaman Lafia operation. Over 170 soldiers have passed through here for treatment; some were flown abroad for further treatment which is not available in this country. Obasanjo’s son was treated in one of our facilities, he is doing well and he is discharged.”


Meanwhile Lt. Col. Adeboye met his father, Obasanjo, after he was discharged on Saturday in Jos.


Though the details of the meeting was not disclosed, but some military chiefs, the Plateau deputy governor, STF commander, Gbong Gwom Jos, Gyang Buba and Maj. Gen. David Enetie were also present in the meeting.


Adeboye is the Commander, 135 Field Engineering Regiment of the Nigerian Army in the Plateau State capital.


It was gathered that the former president and his recuperating son left the meeting at about 7pm and left in the same vehicle.


 



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Obasanjo"s son, Adeboye discharged, met his father in Jos

NEMA delivers relief materials to victims displayed by Boko Haram

National Emergency Management Agency NEMA North East zone has delivered relief items to victims displaced by insurgency from Gwoza, Madagali, Michika , Uba and Mubi LGAs in IDP camps in Adamawa State.


Relief Materials to North East Relief Materials to North East


While handing over the materials to the camp central coordinating committee which comprises various stakeholders (like Adamawa State Emergency Management Agency SEMA, Red cross, civil defence , police , faith based organisations,local and international NGOs like JNI oxfam, SISCOPE, IRC, MSF and UNFPA) at the NYSC Orientation camp in yola; the Zonal Coordinator NEMA North East Alh Muhammed Kanar who was represented by Senior Relief and Rehabilitation officer Saidu Alkali said that the Agency was Impressed by the level of assistance and donations by individuals and corporate entities towards alleviating the suffering of the IDPS.


Alh kanar said that the Director General of NEMA had instructed the Zonal office to ensure that all arrangements have been put in place to ensure that the IDPS stay in camps is made as comfortable as possible.


Receiving the items on behalf of the IDPs, the permanent secretary ADSEMA Alh Haruna Furo, appreciated the support of the Federal Government towards addressing the plight of the people in distress within the North East region.


He said the humanitarian intervention from NEMA would go a long way to ease condition of the displaced people and their host communities.


The humanitarian relief delivered to the camps in three trucks are made up of food and non food items such as rice,

Maize, millets, mattresses, blankets,mosquito nets, sanitary items, detergents, and clothing for women and Children, other items delivered are buckets, soaps and noodles among others. More interventions have been arranged as part of the plans aimed at ensuring the return and rehabilitation of the IDPs.



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NEMA delivers relief materials to victims displayed by Boko Haram

Friday, September 5, 2014

Jonathan declare war, deploys warplanes to fight Boko Haram

Nigerian warplanes are carrying out air strikes against Boko Haram militant bases at Bama, Borno State, a senior official said yesterday, in a government counter-attack against Boko Haram’s drive to create an Islamist enclave.


The official, who asked not to be named, told Reuters Nigeria’s military was battling Boko Haram fighters at Bama, 70 km (45 miles) southeast of the Borno state capital Maiduguri.Army-Jonathan


Army, Jonathan fighting Boko Haram Army, Jonathan fighting Boko Haram


Air strikes have been carried out “on all the Boko Haram bases”, the official said, adding this reflected President Goodluck Jonathan’s order for a “fully-fledged war” against the group which has waged a bloody insurgency since 2009.


“Bama today is the centre of the military battle with the terrorists … Boko Haram is being repelled by the Nigerian troops as we are talking now,” the government official said, without giving details of the operations or casualties.


The battle over Bama, and Boko Haram’s storming of towns and villages to the north, east and south of Maiduguri in recent weeks, has raised fears of an attack on the Borno state capital, prompting hundreds of civilians to flee.


“Even today, we can see so many people leaving … the buses are going out plenty now,” Musa Sumail, a human rights activist in Maiduguri who reports on the violence in the northeast, told Reuters. He said he had seen at least one or two Nigerian government fighter jets in the skies above Maiduguri.



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Jonathan declare war, deploys warplanes to fight Boko Haram

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Boko Haram leader proclaims ‘Islamic caliphate’ in Nigeria

KANO ( AFP) – Boko Haram’s leader said he has created an Islamic caliphate in a northeast Nigeria town seized by the insurgents earlier this month, in a video obtained by AFP on Sunday.


Boko Haram in Borno Boko haram in Borno


“Thanks be to Allah who gave victory to our brethren in (the town of) Gwoza and made it part of the Islamic caliphate,” Abubakar Shekau said in the 52-minute video.


He declared that Gwoza, in Borno state, now has “nothing to do with Nigeria”.


“By the grace of Allah we will not leave the town. We have come to stay,” said Shekau, who has been designated a global terrorist by the United States and sanctioned by the UN Security Council.


The United Nations humanitarian office (OCHA) earlier this month confirmed reports that Gwoza was under rebel control.


Boko Haram is also believed to be in control of other areas near Gwoza in southern Borno, as well as large swathes of territory in northern Borno and at least one town in neighbouring Yobe state.


Mapping the precise areas which have fallen into Islamist hands is nearly impossible.


There are few humanitarian workers on the ground in the northeast, travel is dangerous and the region, which has been under a state of emergency since May of last year, has poor mobile phone coverage.


Experts have described Boko Haram’s gains in recent weeks as unprecedented, saying the group was closer than ever to achieving its goal of carving out a strict Islamic state across northern Nigeria.


But many analysts believe the military has the capacity to reverse the insurgents’ advance.


Soldiers this week refused to deploy to Gwoza without better weapons in an apparent mutiny.



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Boko Haram leader proclaims ‘Islamic caliphate’ in Nigeria